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Thread: Musical Effects

  1. #1

    Musical Effects

    We all know that books (books with literary merit at least) leave lasting effects on the reader, feelings on confusion, sympathy, anger, and so on. I'm curious as to if anyone has found any band/artist/song in which some of these feelings are evoked after hearing it/them.

  2. #2
    String Dancer Shea's Avatar
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    Rachmoninov's Variations on a theme by Paganini (the theme song for the movie Somewhere in Time)

    Forgetting the movie, that song just moves me everytime I hear it. I get shivers just before the song gets really soft. I need to get a new copy of it, I wore out my old CD. I use to put that segment on and hit repeat.
    Hwæt! We Gar-Dena in geardagum,/Þeodcuninga þrum gefrunon,/hu ða æþelingas ellen fremedon!
    Oft Scyld Scefing sceaþena þreatum,/ monegum mægþum, meodosetla ofteah,/ egsode eorlas, syððan ærest wearð/ feasceaft funden; he þæs frofre gebad,/ weox under wolcnum, weorðmyndum þah,/ oðþæt him æghwylc þara ymbsittendra/ofer hronrade hyran scolde,/gomban gyldan. Þæt wæs god cyning!

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    Good morning, Campers! Jay's Avatar
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    Sure, lots of bands, recently Evanescence and Dead Can Dance.
    I have a plan: attack!

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    freaky geeky emily655321's Avatar
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    Too many to name. Isn't that the whole point of music? That's the gauge by which I know whether or not I like a song. However, I've always had an especially strong reaction to Pachelbel's Canon in D. And then there are those haunting songs that just send shivers up and down your spine... for me, it can be anything from Clearlake or Coldplay to Nine Inch Nails, and an infinite number of the more obscure that lie between and beyond.
    If you had to live with this you'd rather lie than fall.
    You think I can't fly? Well, you just watch me!

    ~The Dresden Dolls

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    running amok Sancho's Avatar
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    When I listen to the Blues, I start to feel, well, Blue. I think you're right, Emily-bunch-O-num's, it is the whole point.
    Uhhhh...

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    fated loafer
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    The Requiem

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    Interesting to see some people posting classical pieces. However, these works are definitely not songs.

    Rachmaninov's Variations are energetic and moving. Pachelbel, like most Baroque music, gets rather boring after a while. Still, when first heard, it is quite relaxing.

    Einojuhani Rautavaara's Cantus Arcticus is a beautiful piece of music. All three movements are quite moving. Rautavaara journeyed to the North Pole to record the sound of Arctic birds. He lays this recording over his orchestral work, like a gently falling sheet of silk, until the two blend into the most exquisite sound. In one of the movements, he raises the sounds of the birds by a decibel or two, and then adds a string arrangement. It is beautiful.

    Arvo Part's Cantus In Memoriam Benjamin Britten is lovely too. There is the sound of a bell opening the work, and this gives way to a melodic drone of strings, that carry the listener away into a dreamy utopia. The music cascades upon itself, reaching a crescendo with the return of the bell, at first a distant sound moving forwards, as the strings retreat, finally the piece ends on a single strike of the bell. Most of Part's later stuff is beautiful, but can get repetitious. After the Cantus, The Beatitudes is probably my favourite work of his. He developed what is called the tintinnabuli style: a reverberating string sound.

    John Taverner's work is very moving. I can't really pick any single piece out. Tears of the Angels; Depart in Peace; The Protecting Veil; Funeral Ikos; Two Hymns to the Mother of God; The Lament of the Mother of God; Angels; and Magnificat and Nunc Dimittis are all completely uplifting and moving pieces of music.

    The overall feeling I get when listening to all these works, is one of compassion.
    Faith is believing what you know ain't so - Mark Twain

    The preachers deal with men of straw, as they are men of straw themselves - Henry David Thoreau

    The way to see faith is to shut the eye of reason - Benjamin Franklin

    The teaching of the church, theoretically astute, is a lie in practice and a compound of vulgar superstitions and sorcery - Leo Tolstoy

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    L'artiste est morte crisaor's Avatar
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    Re: Musical Effects

    Originally posted by Blade
    We all know that books (books with literary merit at least) leave lasting effects on the reader, feelings on confusion, sympathy, anger, and so on. I'm curious as to if anyone has found any band/artist/song in which some of these feelings are evoked after hearing it/them.
    Nice question. It happens to me with all of my CDs. I thought it was something common, after all, that is the way music is usually measured, right?
    Ningún hombre llega a ser lo que es por lo que escribe, sino por lo que lee.
    - Jorge Luis Borges

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    Right in the happy button IWilKikU's Avatar
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    I think that thats the point of all art, whether it's visual art, music, literature, poetry, conceptual art, sculpture, ect..
    ...Also baby duck hat would be good for parties.

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    freaky geeky emily655321's Avatar
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    Originally posted by atiguhya padma
    Pachelbel, like most Baroque music, gets rather boring after a while. Still, when first heard, it is quite relaxing.
    Aww, I love Baroque music. Handel, Bach, Vivaldi... good stuff. I like it cause it's string-based; don't dig all the French horns in Classical music. I like to just zone out on my bed and listen to a whole symphony.

    And Chopin, of course. But then everybody likes Chopin. (Relax, I'm not including him in the list of Baroque composers! Just mentioning that I like him.)
    If you had to live with this you'd rather lie than fall.
    You think I can't fly? Well, you just watch me!

    ~The Dresden Dolls

  11. #11
    Right in the happy button IWilKikU's Avatar
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    Blade, if you're talking about SONGS, my favorite bands that really make me feel somthing are (in no particular order): Radiohead, Muse, Tool, System of a Down... I think its the strong minor harmonic lines that do it. If your talking about other music (symphonies, concertos, ect...) try anything from the Romantic era (1820-1910) the whole point of that movement was to incite emotion in the listener. Also Beethoven. Technically he was classical, but his work really ushered in the romantic era. I'm doing an essay about his contribution to "the symphony" and its really amazing the emotional effect that his music had on the 19th century audience. Now days, we've heard the 5th symphony hundreds of times, but when it was written, no one had ever heard anything even close to that emotional intensity except for maybe "Eroica", Beethoven's 3rd.
    ...Also baby duck hat would be good for parties.

  12. #12
    my brother has the CD of the band "system of a down" and i took it because i'm bigger and stornger than him (harharhar) and had a listen, i found it interesting that they use quotes form the bible and the BCP ex. "father into your hand i commit my spirit", anyone familiar with the BCP or bible will know that these were Jesus's last word before he died on the cross. i'm curious as to the meaning the band was trying to establish

  13. #13
    freaky geeky emily655321's Avatar
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    I prefer System's self-titled CD -- Serj does more funny voices on it. But especially reading the lyrics is just neat. He's a smart boy, that man. They also strike the perfect balance between deep intellectualism and off-the-wall silliness in the way that only extremely intelligent and self-aware people can do.

    "PogopogopogopogopogopogopogoBOUNCE!"
    If you had to live with this you'd rather lie than fall.
    You think I can't fly? Well, you just watch me!

    ~The Dresden Dolls

  14. #14
    Drama Queen Koa's Avatar
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    Originally posted by IWilKikU
    I think that thats the point of all art, whether it's visual art, music, literature, poetry, conceptual art, sculpture, ect..
    That's what i think too...
    My favourite bands are those who make me FEEL so deep, whose words I'd paint on every wall... Recently I've been listening far too much to The Cure, and it's always a soul-touching experience...
    dead on the inside, i've got nothing to prove
    keep me alive and give me something to lose

  15. #15
    Right in the happy button IWilKikU's Avatar
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    All three of System's CDs are unique and original. They are my favorite band. As for that song (Chop Suey!).

    I think that what Serj (singer/lyricist) is saying is that he doesn't have faith in Christ's death. The rest of the Sacrifice related lyrics:

    "I don't think you trust
    In
    My
    Self-righteous Suicide"

    Calling the crucifiction a "Self-righeous suicide" certainly makes sense for someone who doesn't believe in Christianity. "Father into your hands I commend my spirit were also the last words of a famous Armenian nationalist/philosopher that he idolises. They sing a lot about the Armenian genocide of 1915, carried out by Turkey. I think that they're drawing a parallel between all their country-men that died for no reason, and Christ who (to him) died for no reason. There are alot of lyrics that have multiple levels like that, that you won't understand unless you know the band well. Alot of thier lyrics are alot deeper then even true fans understand. Serj writes on a personal level that no one (even other band members) really understands except for him.

    www.systemofadown.com <the band's official site
    www.serjicalstrike.com <Serj's record label's site where you can buy his poetry book Cool Gardens
    ...Also baby duck hat would be good for parties.

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